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Dive into the research topics where Nirmala Chandrasekar is active.

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Featured researches published by Nirmala Chandrasekar.


Oncogene | 2002

Downregulation of MMP-9 in ERK-mutated stable transfectants inhibits glioma invasion in vitro

Sajani S. Lakka; Sushma L. Jasti; Christopher S. Gondi; Douglas D. Boyd; Nirmala Chandrasekar; Dzung H. Dinh; William C. Olivero; Meena Gujrati; Jasti S. Rao

We previously showed that enhanced expression of MMP-9, an endopeptidase that digests basement-membrane type IV collagen, is related to tumor progression in vitro and in vivo; antisense-MMP-9 stably transfected clones were less invasive than untransfected parental cells and did not form tumors in nude mice. In this study, we examined the role of ERK-1 in the regulation of MMP-9 production and the invasive behavior of the human glioblastoma cell line SNB19, in which ERK1 is constitutively activated. SNB19 cells were stably transfected with mt-ERK, a vector encoding ERK-1 cDNA in which the conserved lysine at codon 71 was changed to arginine, thus impairing the catalytic efficiency of this enzyme. Gelatin zymography showed reduced levels of MMP-9 in the mt-ERK-transfected cell lines relative to those in vector-transfected and parental control cells. Reductions in MMP-9 protein mRNA levels were also detected in the mt-ERK-transfected cells by Western and Northern blotting. The mt-ERK-transfected cells were much less invasive than parental or vector control cells in a Matrigel invasion assay and in a spheroid coculture assay. Thus an ERK-dependent signaling pathway seems to regulate MMP-9 mediated glioma invasion in SNB19 cells; interfering with this pathway could be developed into a therapeutic approach, which aims at a reduction of cancer cell invasion.


Oncogene | 2002

Adenovirus-mediated expression of antisense MMP-9 in glioma cells inhibits tumor growth and invasion

Sajani S. Lakka; Mannari Rajan; Christopher S. Gondi; Niranjan Yanamandra; Nirmala Chandrasekar; Sushma L. Jasti; Yoshiaki Adachi; Khawar Siddique; Meena Gujrati; William C. Olivero; Dzung H. Dinh; Gregory Kouraklis; Athanassios P. Kyritsis; Jasti S. Rao

Matrix metalloproteinase 9 (MMP-9) is known to play a major role in cell migration and invasion in both physiological and pathological processes. Our previous work has shown that increased MMP-9 levels are associated with human glioma tumor progression. In this study, we evaluated the ability of an adenovirus containing a 528 bp cDNA sequence in antisense orientation to the 5′ end of the human MMP-9 gene (Ad-MMP-9AS) to inhibit the invasiveness and migratory capacity of the human glioblastoma cell line SBN19 in in vitro and in vivo models. Infection of glioma cells with Ad-MMP-9AS reduced MMP-9 enzyme activity by approximately 90% compared with mock- or Ad-CMV-infected cells. Migration and invasion of glioblastoma cells infected with Ad-MMP-9AS were significantly inhibited relative to Ad-CMV-infected controls in spheroid and Matrigel assays. Intracranial injections of SNB19 cells infected with Ad-MMP-9AS did not produce tumors in nude mice. However, injecting the Ad-MMP-9AS construct into subcutaneous U87MG tumors in nude mice caused regression of tumor growth. These results support the theory that adenoviral-mediated delivery of the MMP-9 gene in the antisense orientation has therapeutic potential for treating gliomas.


Oncogene | 2003

Downregulation of uPA inhibits migration and PI3k/Akt signaling in glioblastoma cells

Nirmala Chandrasekar; Sanjeeva Mohanam; Meena Gujrati; William C. Olivero; Dzung H. Dinh; Jasti S. Rao

The ability of glioma cells to migrate great distances from a primary tumor mass is the primary cause of tumor recurrence. The urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) is a serine protease that can initiate proteolytic cascades, which result in remodeling of extracellular matrix and basement membrane, allowing cells to move across and through these barriers. The binding between uPA and its receptor uPAR also mediates several signaling events that seem to contribute to the evolution of a migratory phenotype. In this study, we determined how the downregulation of uPA affects the signaling pathways leading to cell migration. Stably transfecting human glioblastoma cells with antisense uPA decreased the amount of cell-bound uPA and disrupted actin cytoskeleton formation and cell migration. The phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3k) and Akt signaling pathway has been suggested to mediate migration in various cancer cells. The antisense-uPA clones also had less phosphorylated PI3k and Akt than control cells, a finding associated with decreased cell migration, G2/M-phase arrest, and decreased clonogenic survival. Decreased activation of PI3k and the antiapoptotic factor Akt was not sufficient to induce apoptosis in the antisense-uPA clones, but staurosporine sensitized them to apoptosis to a greater extent than control cells. These results indicate that PI3k/Akt pathway is involved in the signaling cascade required to induce cell migration and that uPA has a direct role in regulating migration.


Oncogene | 2001

Down-regulation of cathepsin B expression impairs the invasive and tumorigenic potential of human glioblastoma cells

Sanjeeva Mohanam; Sushma L. Jasti; Sudha R. Kondraganti; Nirmala Chandrasekar; Sajani S. Lakka; Yoshiaki Kin; Gregory N. Fuller; Alfred Yung; Anthanassios P. Kyritsis; Dzung H. Dinh; William C. Olivero; Meena Gujrati; Francis Ali-Osman; Jasti S. Rao

Increases in abundance of cathepsin B transcript and protein correlate with increases in tumor grade and alterations in subcellular localization and activity of cathepsin B. The enzyme is able to degrade the components of the extracellular matrix (ECM) and activate other proteases capable of degrading ECM. To investigate the role played by this protease in the invasion of brain tumor cells, we transfected SNB19 human glioblastoma cells with a plasmid containing cathepsin B cDNA in antisense orientation. Control cells were transfected with vector alone. Clones expressing antisense cathepsin B cDNA exhibited significant reductions in cathepsin B mRNA, enzyme activity and protein compared to controls. Matrigel Invasion assay showed that the antisense-transfected cells had a markedly diminished invasiveness compared with controls. When tumor spheroids containing antisense transfected SNB19 cells expressing reduced cathepsin B were co-cultured with fetal rat brain aggregates, invasion of fetal rat brain aggregates was significantly reduced. Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP) expressing parental cells and antisense transfectants were generated for detection in mouse brain tissue without any post-chemical treatment. Intracerebral injection of SNB19 stable antisense transfectants resulted in reduced tumor formation in nude mice. These results strongly support a role for cathepsin B in the invasiveness of human glioblastoma cells and suggest cathepsin B antisense may prove useful in cancer therapy.


Oncogene | 2001

A novel function of tissue factor pathway inhibitor-2 (TFPI-2) in human glioma invasion.

Santhi D. Konduri; Chilukuri N. Rao; Nirmala Chandrasekar; Anastasia Tasiou; Sanjeeva Mohanam; Yoshiaki Kin; Sajani S. Lakka; Dzung Dinh; William C. Olivero; Meena Gujrati; Donald C. Foster; Walter Kisiel; Jasti S. Rao

Human tissue factor pathway inhibitor-2 (TFPI-2) is a Kunitz-type serine protease inhibitor that inhibits plasmin, trypsin, chymotrypsin, cathepsin G, and plasma kallikrein but not urokinase-type plasminogen activator, tissue plasminogen activator, or thrombin. Preliminary findings in our laboratory suggested that the expression of TFPI-2 is downregulated or lost during tumor progression in human gliomas. To investigate the role of TFPI-2 in the invasiveness of brain tumors, we stably transfected the human high-grade glioma cell line SNB19 and the human low-grade glioma cell line Hs683 with a vector capable of expressing a transcript complementary to the full-length TFPI-2 mRNA in either sense (0.7 kb) or antisense (1 kb) orientations. Parental cells and stably transfected cell lines were analysed for TFPI-2 protein by Western blotting and for TFPI-2 mRNA by Northern blotting. The levels of TFPI-2 protein and mRNA were higher in the sense clones (SNB19) and decreased in the antisense (Hs683) clones than in the corresponding parental and vector controls. In spheroid and matrigel invasion assays, the SNB19 parental cells were highly invasive, but the sense-transfected SNB-19 clones were much less invasive; the antisense-transfected Hs683 clones were more invasive than their parental and vector controls. After intracerebral injection in mice, the sense-transfected SNB19 clones were less able to form tumors than were their parental and vector controls, and the antisense-Hs683 clones but not the parental or vector controls formed small tumors. This is the first study to demonstrate that down- or upregulation of TFPI-2 plays a significant role in the invasive behavior of human gliomas.


Oncogene | 2002

Modulation of invasive properties of human glioblastoma cells stably expressing amino-terminal fragment of urokinase-type plasminogen activator

Sanjeeva Mohanam; Nirmala Chandrasekar; Niranjan Yanamandra; Siddique Khawar; Faiz Mirza; Dzung H. Dinh; William C. Olivero; Jasti S. Rao

The binding of urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) to its receptor (uPAR) on the surface of tumor cells is involved in the activation of proteolytic cascades responsible for the invasiveness of those cells. The diffuse, extensive infiltration of glioblastomas into the surrounding normal brain tissue is believed to rely on modifications of the proteolysis of extracellular matrix components; blocking the interaction between uPA and uPAR might be a suitable approach for inhibiting glioma tumorigenesis. We assessed how expression of an amino-terminal fragment (ATF) of uPA that contains binding site to uPAR affects the invasiveness of SNB19 human glioblastoma cells. SNB19 cells were transfected with an expression plasmid (pcDNA3-ATF) containing a cDNA sequence of ATF-uPA. The resulting ATF-uPA-expressing clones showed markedly less cell adhesion, spreading, and clonogenicity than did control cells. Endogenous ATF expression also significantly decreased the invasive capacity of transfected glioblastoma cells in Matrigel and spheroid-rat brain cell aggregate models. ATF-uPA transfectants were also markedly less invasive than parental SNB19 cells after injection into the brains of nude mice, suggesting that competitive inhibition of the uPA-uPAR interaction on SNB19 cells by means of transfection with ATF cDNA could be a useful therapeutic strategy for inhibiting tumor progression.


Oncogene | 2002

Suppression of glioma invasion and growth by adenovirus-mediated delivery of a bicistronic construct containing antisense upar and sense p16 gene sequences

Yoshiaki Adachi; Nirmala Chandrasekar; Yoshiaki Kin; Sajani S. Lakka; Sanjeeva Mohanam; Niranjan Yanamandra; Pamarthi M. Mohan; Gregory N. Fuller; Bingliang Fang; Juan Fueyo; Dzung H. Dinh; William C. Olivero; Takashi Tamiya; Takashi Ohmoto; Anthanassios P. Kyritsis; Jasti S. Rao

Our previous studies showed that the urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor (uPAR) and the p16 tumor suppressor gene play a significant role in glioma invasion. We expected that downregulation of uPAR and overexpression of p16 using a bicistronic vector might cause a additive and cooperative effect in the suppression of glioma invasion and growth. The bicistronic construct (Ad-uPAR/p16)-infected glioblastoma cell lines had significantly lower levels of uPAR and higher levels of p16 than controls. Cell cycle analysis showed the bicistronic vector caused G0/G1 arrest of the cell cycle. In vitro glioblastoma cell growth and invasiveness were inhibited in Ad-uPAR/p16-infected cells compared with controls. Ad-uPAR/p16 suppressed the tumor growth of glioblastoma cell lines in an ex vivo intracerebral tumor model and an in vivo subcutaneous tumor model. Our results support the therapeutic potential of simultaneously targeting uPAR and p16 in the treatment of gliomas.


Clinical & Experimental Metastasis | 2000

Modulation of endothelial cell morphogenesis in vitro by MMP-9 during glial-endothelial cell interactions.

Nirmala Chandrasekar; Sushma L. Jasti; W. K. Alfred-Yung; Francis Ali-Osman; Dzung H. Dinh; William C. Olivero; Meena Gujrati; Athanassios P. Kyritsis; Garth L. Nicolson; Jasti S. Rao; Sanjeeva Mohanam

The purpose of this study was to investigate the roles of matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-1 (TIMP-1) in the formation of capillary structures by human brain microvascular endothelial cells cocultured with SNB19 glioblastoma cells. Unstimulated cocultures did not form capillaries and produce MMP-9 but stimulation with the protein kinase C (PKC) activator 4-phorbol-12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) produced MMP-9 and capillary networks. Addition of recombinant MMP-9 increased capillary formation. Anti-MMP-9 antibodies, TIMP-1, the synthetic MMPs inhibitor Batimastat (BB-94), and the PKC inhibitor calphostin-C all reduced MMP-9 activity and capillary network formation in these cocultures. Cytochalasin-D in the presence of PMA suppressed MMP-9 expression and capillary formation, but colchicine-B had no such effect. Finally, PMA-induced MMP-9 expression and capillary formation were inhibited by the MEKK-specific inhibitor PD98059. These results suggest that MMP-9 is important in endothelial cell morphogenesis and the formation of capillaries in glial/endothelial cocultures in vitro.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

Down-regulation of Integrin αvβ3 Expression and Integrin-mediated Signaling in Glioma Cells by Adenovirus-mediated Transfer of Antisense Urokinase-type Plasminogen Activator Receptor (uPAR) and Sense p16 Genes

Yoshiaki Adachi; Sajani S. Lakka; Nirmala Chandrasekar; Niranjan Yanamandra; Christopher S. Gondi; Sanjeeva Mohanam; Dzeng H. Dinh; William C. Olivero; Meena Gujrati; Takashi Tamiya; Takashi Ohmoto; Gregory Kouraklis; Bharat B. Aggarwal; Jasti S. Rao


Clinical & Experimental Metastasis | 2000

Role of tissue factor pathway inhibitor-2 (TFPI-2) in amelanotic melanoma (C-32) invasion.

Santhi D. Konduri; Anastasia Tasiou; Nirmala Chandrasekar; Garth L. Nicolson; Jasti S. Rao

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Jasti S. Rao

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Dzung H. Dinh

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Sanjeeva Mohanam

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Sajani S. Lakka

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Meena Gujrati

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Sushma L. Jasti

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Niranjan Yanamandra

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Yoshiaki Kin

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Christopher S. Gondi

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Gregory N. Fuller

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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